Baron FitzWalter is an ancient title in the
Peerage of England. It was created on 24 June 1295 for
Robert FitzWalter. The title was created by
writ, which means that it can descend through both male and female lines.
History
Thomas Radclyffe, 3rd Earl of Sussex and 12th Baron FitzWalterGoodnestone House, Kent
One of the oldest titles in the English Peerage, the barony of FitzWalter has a long history. The fourth baron was an
Admiral of the Fleet. The fourth baron's grandson, the sixth baron, died from dysentery at the
siege of Harfleur. He was succeeded by his brother, the seventh baron, who was the last known male line descendant of
Rollo of Normandy, and was succeeded by his daughter and only child, Elizabeth. She was the wife of John Radcliffe. Their son, the ninth baron, was attainted for treason in 1495 with his title forfeited. However, his son Robert Radcliffe obtained a reversal of the attainder by Act of Parliament in 1509 and later served as
Lord Lieutenant of Lancashire. He was created by Viscount FitzWalter in 1525 and
Earl of Sussex in 1529. His grandson, the third earl, was summoned to the
House of Lords through a
writ of acceleration in 1553 in his father's junior title of Baron FitzWalter. Lord Sussex later served as
Lord Deputy of Ireland. He was succeeded by his younger brother, the fourth earl. He had earlier represented
Maldon,
Hampshire and
Portsmouth in the
House of Commons and also served as
Lord Lieutenant of Hampshire. When he died the titles passed to his only child, the fifth earl. He was
Lord Lieutenant of Essex.
On his death in 1629, the barony of FitzWalter separated from the viscountcy and earldom. The latter titles were inherited by the late earl's cousin and heir male, the sixth earl, who notably sat as a
Member of Parliament for
Petersfield,
Bedford and Portsmouth. When he died in 1643 the viscountcy and earldom became extinct. The claim to the barony of FitzWalter was passed on to the fifth earl's cousin and heir-general Henry Mildmay, de jure fifteenth baron. He was the son of
Lady Frances, the only daughter of the second earl of Sussex by his second wife,
Anne Calthorpe. He claimed the barony in 1641 and 1645 but was unsuccessful both times and was never summoned to the House of Lords. His grandson Henry Mildmay, de jure sixteenth baron, successfully[citation needed] claimed the title in 1660. However, his younger brother Benjamin Mildmay successfully petitioned for the peerage in 1667 and was summoned to the House of Lords as the seventeenth baron. In 1730 his younger son, the nineteenth baron, was created Viscount Harwich, in the County of Essex, and Earl FitzWalter, in the
Peerage of Great Britain. Lord FitzWalter later served as
President of the Board of Trade and was also
Lord Lieutenant of Essex.
However, on his death in 1756, the viscountcy and earldom became extinct while the barony of FitzWalter fell into
abeyance between the daughters of Mary, only sister of the sixteenth and seventeenth barons. The peerage remained in abeyance for 168 years, until it was called out of abeyance in 1924 (after a petition to the House of Lords) in favour of Henry Fitzwalter Plumptre, who became the twentieth baron.[2] He was the son of John Bridges Plumptre and grandson of Eleanor, wife of Reverend Henry Western Plumptre and daughter of Sir Brook William Bridges, 4th Baronet, of Goodneston, a descendant of the aforementioned Mary, sister of the sixteenth and seventeenth barons. Sir Brook William Bridge's eldest son
Sir Brook William Bridges, 5th Baronet, of Goodneston, had unsuccessfully claimed the barony in 1842, but was instead created Baron FitzWalter, of Woodham Walter in the County of Essex, in 1868 (for more information on this creation, which became extinct in 1875, see
Bridges baronets of Goodneston).
The twentieth baron died childless in 1932 when the peerage once again fell into abeyance. The abeyance was terminated in 1953 in favour of Fitzwalter Brook Plumptre, the twenty-first Baron. He was the son of George Beresford Plumptre, the younger brother of the twentieth baron. As of 2017[update], the title is held by his son, the twenty-second Baron, who succeeded in 2004.
The family seat is
Goodnestone Park. The house was built in 1704 by Sir Brook Bridges, 1st Baronet, of Goodneston. The house came into the Plumptre family through the marriage of the aforesaid Eleanor Bridges, daughter of Sir Brook William Bridges, 4th Baronet, of Goodneston, to Reverend Henry Western Plumptre, whose son John Bridges Plumptre inherited it upon the death of the last Bridges baronet of Goodneston in 1899.
The FitzWalters were of the same line as the de Clare. Presuming they were from an unbroken male line, the seventh baron was the last
agnate of the
House of Normandy. Through de Balliol they also have a connection to the old Saxon line in England.
^
abcdefgChristopher Starr, ‘Fitzwalter family (per. c.1200–c.1500)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004
accessed 20 Aug 2017
^This barony was created by
Simon de Montfort, who, in the King's name, issued writs of summons to
a parliament to attempt to stabilise his position during the
Second Barons' War. This barony was given its precedence by the House of Lords in 1806.